By Ryan “Dickie” Thompson – Disruptarian Radio


Charlie Kirk is dead, and the world is awake.

I’ve been around long enough to see the outrage machine spin after tragedies. But what we’re seeing right now after Kirk’s assassination isn’t just outrage. It’s uprising. And not just in the United States—this has lit a fuse around the globe.


Millions in the Streets

Look at London. Depending on who you ask, there were 110,000 people in the streets or over 3 million. Shoulder to shoulder, mile after mile. Chanting Charlie’s name. Holding his picture. Singing.

Mainstream media rushed to paint it as a “far-right anti-immigration rally.” NBC even tried to frame it as a nationalist surge. But the footage tells a different story. These weren’t mobs screaming about borders. These were ordinary people mourning a man killed for speaking his mind.

And you know what? That scares the hell out of the elites. Because if people rally in the millions for a guy who asked simple questions like “What is a woman?”—it proves that free speech is still sacred to the human spirit.


The Spin vs. The Truth

NBC, MSNBC, and their cousins can’t help themselves. To them, every gathering of people not chanting for “equity” must be a far-right riot. It’s lazy. It’s dishonest. And it’s predictable.

But on the ground? The chants weren’t about race or immigration. They were about freedom. They were about speech. They were about faith.

From the haka in New Zealand by the Maori people, to vigils across Spain, to a mass march in South Korea chanting “We are Charlie Kirk”—this isn’t nationalism. It’s humanity. It’s people everywhere saying: “We refuse to let speech be silenced with bullets.”


Religion and Resolve

There’s also no denying the religious pulse in this movement. Before Kirk’s killing, there was the Catholic school shooting in Minnesota. Christians are under attack—from America to Europe—and people know it.

In London, chants of “Christ is King” broke out. Vigils were prayers. Hymns filled the air. For all the smears about Christianity being “oppressive,” it’s clear faith is one of the last refuges of people who want to live free.

The irony here is brutal. An assassin thought killing Charlie Kirk would silence him. Instead, it made him global. Instead of shrinking the movement, it multiplied it. Instead of stopping his voice, it unleashed a chorus.


Everyday People Taking a Stand

One of the most striking things isn’t the organized rallies. It’s the spontaneous moments. At a Gavin Adcock concert, a crowd suddenly erupted into chants of “Charlie.” At vigils, strangers sang hymns together.

That doesn’t come from PR campaigns. That doesn’t come from party machinery. That comes from people’s guts.

And here’s the thing: movements built from the bottom up are the ones that scare power the most.


The Left’s Panic

The left’s response tells you everything.

Professors joked. Corporate PR people celebrated. MSNBC called him “divisive” while the body was still warm. Democrats in Congress booed when asked for a prayer.

This is the mask slipping. People who claim “compassion” cheered assassination. People who cry “tolerance” mocked death.

And millions around the world saw it. That’s the shift. Not everyone in those crowds were Republicans. Many weren’t even Americans. But they saw the difference between people mourning and people celebrating. And they’re choosing sides.


A Multicultural Awakening

The talking heads love to say conservatism is for old white men. Yet look who’s rallying.

  • Latinos chanting in the streets.
  • Black Americans saying “the Democrats are cooked.”
  • Filipinos, Asians, Armenians, Romanians—all saying they stand with Charlie.
  • Indigenous New Zealanders performing sacred rituals in his honor.

That’s not a “far-right rally.” That’s a global awakening.


A Turning Point

History isn’t written in real time. But I’ll say this: when millions of people across continents mourn a man murdered for speaking, that’s a turning point.

Charlie Kirk is gone. But his assassin failed. Failed to silence him. Failed to scare people into submission. Failed to kill the idea that speech matters.

If anything, the assassin created an army of new Charlie Kirks—ordinary people who now feel called to stand up.

And that should terrify anyone who thought violence could win the argument.


Final Thoughts

The left wanted a martyr. What they got was a movement.

You can smear, you can lie, you can de-legitimize. But you can’t fake millions of voices rising from London to Seoul to Madrid.

This isn’t just grief. This is resolve.

The truth is simple: silence won’t save us. But courage might. And right now, the world is choosing courage.

— Ryan “Dickie” Thompson
Disruptarian Radio

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